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A long-lived butterfly’s secret to graceful ageing

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Why This Matters

The discovery that Heliconius butterflies can live significantly longer due to their pollen-based diet offers insights into longevity and reproductive strategies, which could inspire innovations in aging research and biomimicry in the tech industry. Understanding how diet influences lifespan in these butterflies may also inform broader biological studies relevant to health and aging in humans.

Key Takeaways

Species in the Heliconius genus are among the longest-lived butterflies, thanks to a diet of pollen.

Most tropical butterflies survive in their colourful adult forms for just a few weeks — the epitome of ephemeral beauty — but one group has evolved to live much longer. Jessica Foley at the University of Bristol, UK, and her colleagues studied the Heliconius butterfly genus, which 12 million–18 million years ago began adding pollen to butterflies’ typical nectar diet. Pollen provides the adults with nutrients that they can use to keep their bodies working longer and allows for prolonged reproduction. Data collated from published field studies and public butterfly houses show that at least one pollen-eating Heliconius hewitsoni individual lived to the venerable age of 348 days.

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-01948-0

References Foley, J. et al. Nature Commun. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-73635-7 (2026). Download references

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